Baked Oatmeal with Pears

Whenever I can, I try to think ahead about breakfast, prepping burritos I can reheat in the microwave or setting up overnight oats before I go to bed. But no meal-prep breakfast has me in its grip like thisBaked Oatmeal with Pearsrecipe.

Jennifer Garner Made Brownie Baked Oatmeal and It’s Like Eating Dessert for Breakfast

I am evangelical about this oatmeal. I dream about this oatmeal. To level with you, I wish I was eating some of this oatmeal right now. It’s a really delicious recipe that doesn’t veer into too-sweet territory thanks to sweetening from maple syrup and the pears themselves. You can add more fruit if you prefer something sweeter, but it doesn’t need it. You can make it in about an hour and, assuming you love the smell of cinnamon, nutmeg and pear, your kitchen will smell divine afterward.

For this foolproof recipe, you’ll need old-fashioned oats, walnuts, cinnamon, baking powder, salt, nutmeg, cloves, milk, Greek yogurt, maple syrup, olive oil, vanilla extract and pears. Of course, the best part about this recipe is just how adaptable the ingredients list is. If you love an oatmeal with a little more texture, swapping in extra-thick rolled oats, likethese from Bob’s Red Mill, is an enormous win. And there’s no need to stick to walnuts if you’d rather substitute pecans or slivered almonds. You can use 2% milk or opt for almond milk to tone down the dairy. Pears are—trust me—incredibly delicious in this recipe, but it also works with whatever fruit looks best in the produce department. As long as you end up with about 2 cups of diced fruit, I can attest that blueberries, strawberries, peaches and apples all make delicious substitutions.

I’m a Dietitian & This Is My #1 Meal-Prep Breakfast

Making the recipe is simple, but you’ll need two bowls: one for combining the wet ingredients and another for combining the dry ones. Pour the combined wet ingredients into the dry bowl, add your fruit and combine gently. Then transfer the oatmeal mixture to a greased 9-inch-square baking dish (or whatever dish you choose) and bake for about 50 minutes.

I use thisPampered Cheflarge muffin pan to portion out my oatmeal before baking—if you use a smaller pan or a muffin tin, just be sure you modify the cook time and check on the pan as it bakes. It’s easy to divide up the oatmeal once baked all together, but there’s also something nice about having all six servings equally divvied up and waiting to be eaten in perfect bowl form. While these mega-muffin-sized oatmeals aren’t quite portable the way ourBaked Blueberry & Banana-Nut Oatmeal Cupsare, they’re pretty darn easy to reheat and eat quickly in the morning.

14 Healthy Breakfasts You Can Make for $1

Plus, oatmeal is the breakfast foodour dietitians love best. It’s affordable—which sounds more appealing than ever right now—adaptable and pretty healthy. In fact, ourBaked Oatmeal with Pearsrecipe isdiabetes-friendly, low-calorie and high in calcium. My family loves it, and it looks like a million bucks when baked in a nice dish, like thisStaub oval baker, so you could even incorporate it into your holiday breakfast plans. However you adapt it, this recipe is one you’ll want to make all winter long.

Was this page helpful?Thanks for your feedback!Tell us why!OtherSubmit

Was this page helpful?

Thanks for your feedback!

Tell us why!OtherSubmit

Tell us why!